What is fate? Fate is this -- Whatever
is, must be. But there is a difference between that and Providence. Providence
says, Whatever God ordains must be; but the wisdom of God never ordains any
thing without a purpose. Every thing in this world is working for some one
great end. Fate does not say that. Fate simply says that the thing must be;
Providence says, God moves the wheels along, and there they are. If any thing
would go wrong, God puts it right; and if there is any thing that would move
awry, he puts his hand and alters it. It comes to the same thing; but there is
a difference as to the object. There is all the difference between fate and
Providence that there is between a man with good eyes and a blind man. Fate is
a blind thing; it is the avalanche crushing the village down below and
destroying thousands. Providence is not an avalanche; it is a rolling river,
rippling at the first like a rill down the sides of the mountain, followed by
minor streams, till it rolls in the broad ocean of everlasting love, working
for the good of the human race. The doctrine of Providence is not, that what
is, must be; but that, what is, works together for the good of our race, and
especially for the good of the chosen people of God. The wheels are full of eyes;
not blind wheels. And, my brethren, it is quite certain that no man ever begins
the new birth himself. The work of salvation never was commenced by any man.
God the Holy Spirit must commence it. Now, the reasons why no man ever
commenced the work of grace in his own heart, is very plain and palpable.
First, because he cannot; secondly, because he won't. The best reason of all
is, because he cannot—he is dead. Well the dead may be made alive, but the dead
cannot make themselves alive, for the dead can do nothing. Besides, the new
thing to be created as yet hath no being. The uncreated cannot create.
"Nay," but you say, "that man can create." Yes, can hell
create heaven? Then sin may create grace. What! will you tell me that fallen
human nature, that has come almost to a level with the brutes, is competent to
rival God; that it can emulate the divinity in working as great marvels, and in
imparting as divine a life as even God himself can give? It cannot. Besides, it
is a creation; we are created anew in Christ Jesus. Let any man create a fly,
and afterwards let him create a new heart in himself; until he hath done the
less he cannot do the greater. Besides, no man will. If any man could convert
himself, there is no man that would. If any man saith he would, if that be
true, he is already converted; for the will to be converted is in great part
conversion. The will to love God, the desire to be in unison with Christ, is
not to be found in any man who hath not already been brought to be reconciled
with God through the death of his Son. There may be a false desire, a desire
grounded upon a misrepresentation of the truth; but a true desire after true
salvation by the true Spirit, is a certain index that the salvation already is
there in the germ and in the bud, and only needs time and grace to develop
itself. But certain it is, that man neither can nor will, being on the one hand
utterly impotent and dead, and on the other hand utterly depraved and
unwilling; hating the change when he sees it in others, and most of all
despising it in himself. Be certain, therefore, that God the Holy Spirit must
begin, since none else can do so.
Charles
Spurgeon
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